One Good Man

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Authors: Alison Kent

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BOOK: One Good Man
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Alison Kent
“For me Alison Kent’s name on a book means that I am guaranteed to have a story that is realistic, entertaining, compelling and sexy as all get-out.
—ARomanceReview.com
“Alison Kent has created in her giRL-gEAR series a believable, modern world where men and women behave just a little bit naughtier than they do in real life.”
—AllAboutRomance.com
“An outstanding tale of passion, sensuality and a dark fascination, Ms. Kent’s romance turns up the heat.”
—Romantic Times BOOKreviews
on
The Sweetest Taboo
“Alison Kent delivers a knockout read.”
—Romantic Times BOOKreviews
on
All Tied Up
“Alison Kent mesmerizes us with a compelling love story brimming with scorching sensuality and abiding love.”
—Romantic Times BOOKreviews
on
Call Me

Dear Reader,

I was born in Texas and have lived here most of my life. And I love it. Living in Texas is like living in a small country. Driving north from the Mexico border at Brownsville to Texhoma in the panhandle takes fifteen hours. Driving east from the New Mexico border at El Paso to Louisiana takes twelve.

On the Gulf Coast where I live, humidity reigns, but in far west Texas’s Big Bend, the weather can be bone-dry. I live at 141 feet above sea level, but in the Davis and Guadalupe mountain ranges, peaks reach as high as 8,700 feet. Every comfort I might want I can find within ten minutes. In west Texas, I can drive for miles and see nothing.

That’s why I chose west Texas as the setting for
One Good Man
. It’s big and wild and untamed. And it’s the perfect setting for a good guy to get his girl-once he gets rid of the bad guy, of course. Such is the story of Texas Ranger Sergeant Kell Harding, and his girl, Jamie Danby, who’s seen as much horror in her life as has her Ranger.

Visit me anytime at www.alisonkent.com, where you can read excerpts from all the novels I’ve written for Harlequin over the years.

All my best,

Alison Kent

Alison Kent
ONE GOOD MAN

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Alison Kent is the author of five sexy books for Harlequin Temptation—including
Call Me,
which she sold live on CBS
48 Hours
—several steamy books for Harlequin Blaze, including Waldenbooks bestsellers
The Sweetest Taboo
and
Kiss & Makeup,
and a number of sizzling books for Kensington Brava, including the Smithson Group series, as well as a handful of fun and sassy stories for other imprints. She is also the author of
The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Writing Erotic Romance.
Alison lives in a Houston, Texas, suburb, with her own romance hero.
Books by Alison Kent
HARLEQUIN BLAZE
24—ALL TIED UP

32—NO STRINGS ATTACHED

40—BOUND TO HAPPEN

68—THE SWEETEST TABOO

99—STRIPTEASE

107—WICKED GAMES

120—INDISCREET

197—KISS & MAKEUP

213—RED LETTER NIGHTS
“Luv U Madly”

225—GOES DOWN EASY

287—INFATUATION

429—KISS & TELL

453—A LONG, HARD RIDE

To HK, WD, k2, JM and SF, who made me laugh at
least once every day while writing this. And to Walt,
who makes me laugh every day whether I’m writing
or not. You, dear, are the best of all good men.
Contents
1
G
RUDGINGLY ACCEPTING
her repetitive routine as a sure sign of impending spinsterhood, Jamie Danby still began every day the same way—with a two-mile run, a shower and clothes change, then a large cup of coffee, a banana-bran muffin and the front page of the
Reeves County News.
The paper and the breakfast she picked up each morning on her way to work. When weather permitted, she walked.

It was only six blocks from her two-bedroom cottage to the Cantu Corner Store—Dolores Cantu baked the muffins herself and saved the plumpest of the batch for Jamie—and only another ten to Weldon Pediatrics, the small West Texas practice where Jamie had worked as office manager for six years.

Because she walked, she usually finished her coffee before she arrived. Her mother knew this, being as familiar with Jamie’s daily routine as with her own.

On those days, Dr. Kate, as she was fondly referred to by the county’s residents, would bring Jamie a refill, picking it up with her own breakfast—an egg, potato, cheese and chorizo burrito, loaded and folded by Dolores’s husband, Juan—before making the drive five miles north to the Danby Veterinary Clinic.

This morning, Jamie was still outside the pediatrics office, a boxy building of brown siding with rock beds of succulents hugging the front, fitting her key into the door, when her mother’s black Suburban pulled into the lot that would soon be teeming with bilingual mothers and children.

Jamie turned briefly, squinting against the sun as she watched Kate swing the SUV in a semicircle, the big vehicle’s tires grinding on the gravel and creating a cloud of dust thick enough to gag a horse. Jamie’s mother had always been more focused on her destination than the journey of getting there, and it showed in the way she drove.

Once the clinic’s door was unlocked, Jamie dropped her keys into the bulky hobo bag hanging from her shoulder, and walked to where her mother waited. She took the coffee Kate handed her, removed the top from her empty cup, and settled the new one into the old.

After a quick sip, she smiled and said, “Where would I be without you to look after me?”

The corner of Kate’s mouth, her lips smooth and free of added color, quirked to one side. “Married with children?”

It was an ongoing joke between overprotective mother and a daughter who had been through hell and only by a miracle survived. Though could Jamie really call it surviving?

Ten years later she was still in hiding, existing not as her own woman, but as a creation of the horrific crime she’d witnessed when she’d been just nineteen years old.

Not having kids or a husband was, in her case, for the best. Should her memories of what she’d seen return, she didn’t know if she’d be fit to live with, or if the remembered trauma would send her over the edge.

No, the future Jamie saw for herself was one spent alone. And, really—she was okay with it. Independence. Doing her own thing. A woman, an island unto herself. Seriously. How bad could spinsterhood be?

Another sip, and she thought back to what her mother had said. “I’m too spoiled for marriage and children. I like getting my own way all the time.”

Kate shook her head, and reached for her own coffee where it steamed from the holder built into the Suburban’s center console. “I’ll cop to being a hovering nuisance, but the spoiling is your own doing. I was always too busy working and worrying to waste time seeing to your every whim.”

Jamie nearly choked, but managed to swallow and come up laughing. “Are you kidding me? Where do you think I learned the art? You were the best teacher a girl could have.” She raised her cardboard cup as proof. “You still are.”

“Humph.” Kate shook her head, fought a smile with a frown. “It would only be spoiling if I were stopping at the Cantus’ just for you. But since I’m stopping for my own breakfast, it’s not.”

“You keep telling yourself that,” Jamie said, lifting a hand to wave at Roni and Honoria, two of her coworkers who carpooled to Weldon from Alpine, and had just arrived in Honoria’s sedan. “And I’ll keep enjoying being single and an only child.”

Kate arched a brow, studying her daughter’s face as if the right angle might show her something new. “Sounds to me like you learned more from me than spoiling. You learned the art of self-deception as well.”

Jamie tilted her cup against her mother’s in a toast. They were two of a kind, gracefully accepting what life had served them. And though both would rather things had turned out differently, neither would give up the bond they now shared to make it so. “You have a busy day ahead of you?”

Kate nodded, pushing up the brim of the Danby Veterinary ball cap that covered the short wedge of her silvered brown hair. “The Barneses are bringing in their litter of shepherd pups. Two spays and six neuters.”

“Which means you’d better get going.”

“Which means I’d better get going. Besides—” Kate angled her chin in the direction of the clinic “—it looks like your staff has something on their mind.”

Jamie followed the direction of her mother’s gaze. Just inside the plate-glass entrance, Roni and Honoria stood facing each other, gesturing dramatically in Jamie’s direction. She couldn’t imagine what had them so animated this early. The day’s first patient had yet to arrive.

She backed away from her mother’s Suburban and hefted her bag more securely over her shoulder. “I’d better see what’s going on. And you’ve got a dozen testicles calling your name. Thanks for the refill.”

As her mother pulled out of the parking lot, leaving with a full-arm wave, Jamie headed for the front door. She opened it to the sound of scurrying feet squeaking on the tiled floor as Honoria disappeared down the hallway toward the examination rooms.

Roni had obviously been in a similar hurry to take her seat at the front desk. Her headset was on crooked, and as Jamie came closer, she saw an insurance file open in front of the other woman. A tall blonde Laurel to Honoria’s short dark Hardy, Roni stared at her computer monitor, doing her comical best to pretend she was hard at work.

Jamie blew the other woman’s cover by reaching across the reception counter and turning the file right side up. “Might as well spill it now before the two of you explode. With Dr. Griñon here only half a day, I won’t have time to clean up the mess if you do.”

“Why are his half days the busiest of the week? And why don’t we get to leave at noon, too?” Roni asked, forcing a light laugh as she situated the folder to her liking. She refused to meet Jamie’s gaze. “I swear, Wednesdays should be relaxing, but they can really suck.”

They could, but Jamie knew when Roni was grabbing for a distraction. The spots of color high on her cheeks told the tale. “You’re changing the subject.”

“Am I?” The color brightened. “I thought I was commenting on what you just said. You know, making conversation?”

“I’m not going away, so you might as well fess up.” Jamie set her bag and her breakfast on the counter that rose in front of the desk, and her gaze on Roni, snapped open the single-section newspaper.

No sooner had she smoothed it out than Roni grabbed it, hiding it beneath the desk in her lap, ignoring the “gimme” motion Jamie made with her hand. “Honoria said she wanted to talk to you first thing.”

“What about?” And more importantly, how much of Jamie’s paper was salvageable, and how much was smeared on Roni’s pink scrub pants?

“I don’t know, I mean, I don’t remember.” Flustered, Roni stood and leaned across the counter to call out, “Honoria! Jamie’s here!”

As if Roni’s partner in crime wasn’t already aware. Jamie sighed. “This better not be some early surprise birthday-party thing…” Surely her mother would still be outside if it was, ready to come in and sing and blow noisemakers with the other two.

Roni met Jamie’s gaze, frowning for a moment before her brown doe eyes went wide. “If there’s a surprise party, I don’t know anything about it, and this isn’t it. Honoria! Get your butt out here now!”

Jamie sighed. Dear Roni, giving it away without admitting to a thing. Jamie’s birthday wasn’t for another two weeks, but she knew no one was going to let the momentous occasion of her turning thirty come and go quietly. That’s how it was for old maids.

Honoria emerged from the file room, the morning’s patient charts clutched to her ample chest.
Ample
was Jamie’s word. Honoria considered herself short and dumpy and copy-paper plain—but then she’d never seen herself light up like the desert sky when her husband, Vicente, swept her away from the clinic for a private lunch.

Right now, the only thing bright about her were her eyes as her gaze bore into Roni’s, broadcasting her disbelief that the blonde couldn’t handle things on her own. Obviously, the two hadn’t had time to get their story straight.

Whatever they were up to, it would have to wait. Jamie was hungry. “I’m going to the break room to eat my breakfast and read whatever part of the paper I can. Come get me when you’ve figured out how to tell me whatever it is you don’t want me to know.”

She lifted her bag by the shoulder strap, grabbed her coffee with the same hand, and reached with the other for the newspaper Roni still held captive.

Roni, having sat again, remained as silent and smiling as long-faced Laurel. Jamie turned to the Hardy of the duo. “I need my morning news. You know how I am without my morning news.”

Honoria nodded, not a strand of her short wavy hair moving. Neither did her lips, not right away, and her eyes had gone flat. For the first time since walking into the comedy routine, Jamie was not amused. “What’s going on, guys?”

“You don’t want to see the newspaper today,
mija.
” Honoria pulled a copy of the latest
O Magazine
from her stack of files. She worshipped Oprah like she would a goddess. “Read Oprah instead. She has good, positive, cheery things to say.”

Meaning whatever was in the
Reeves County News
was a bad, negative downer. Jamie thought quickly. Her mother was fine. She had yet to see Dr. Griñon today, but if something had happened to the clinic’s pediatrician, Laurel and Hardy here wouldn’t be hiding it. And they were both here, so there was nothing going on with their families.

Families. Jamie’s father. He hadn’t been a part of her life for ten years. Not since she’d been nineteen, attending Texas Tech University at Junction, living with her parents on their struggling ranch between Junction and Sonora, and working on Interstate 10 as a waitress at the Sonora Nites Diner. It had been his choice to walk out of her life, to leave her and her mother to deal with the things he hadn’t been strong enough to handle. That didn’t mean bad news wouldn’t hurt.

“Is it my dad?” She knew it wasn’t. Her mother would have told her had something happened to Steven Monroe. Which left only…that other thing.

Once more, Jamie set down her belongings and waited for the paper. This time, she wasn’t taking no for an answer. Sharing a sad look with Honoria, Roni placed the folded and wrinkled sheets into Jamie’s shaking hand.

There was only one thing that could have happened. Only one thing her friends would keep from her. Not because they didn’t want her to know—she would find out eventually no matter what—but because of the wounds the news would reopen.

What her friends didn’t understand was that the wounds had never really closed.

She crushed the paper, looked from Roni to Honoria, tears filling her eyes and blurring her vision, emotion lodged in her throat like a red rubber ball. “They found the last body, didn’t they?”

Both pairs of brown eyes held distress and sympathy and fear. Jamie felt only one of the three. Her hands continued to tremble, her stomach twisted and gripped. Her friends nodded, first one, then the other, tears rolling down Honoria’s cheeks as Roni choked back a sob.

Neither woman had known Jamie at the time of the murders—she and her mother had moved to Weldon not long after—and no one other than Jamie’s parents and the authorities involved knew the details of that night.

Not even the families of the other victims—the victims who had died, and the one who had been dragged from the diner against his will. Jamie had been a victim, too, but that fact seemed lost on those left behind.

They’d demanded answers, had called her a liar, a coward, when the truth was she’d had no answers to give. She knew their lashing out was a coping mechanism; it gave them something to do when they felt so helpless. They wanted to know why she had been the one to live instead of their children, their siblings, their spouse. But most of all they wanted to know why she couldn’t remember enough of that night to help authorities catch the person who’d destroyed so many lives.

She breathed deeply, tasted bile at the back of her throat and spread the newspaper open to the headline on the front page.

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